Quick Links: Practicity
Overview Listing of KM Tools Tool Description Addition of Knowledge
Organization of Knowledge Visualization of Knowledge Knowledge Retrieval
Usage of Knowledge Knowledge and Collaboration Knowledge and Organizational Memory

KM Tools: Practicity

 

 

Tool Description

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Practicity is a web-based knowledge sharing environment.  The idea is that colleagues who are collaborating on some project will do so in the Practicity web environment via their web browser.  The designers claim that the Practicity server, seeing how it facilitates all interaction between the users of the "community-of-practice", is able to capture all interactions between users, the content of those interactions, and the context of those interactions and store it in a central knowledge base so that users can access it and share it from that one central location via their web browsers.  It is designed not only for colleagues but also the clients who are involved in some project, so on that note different areas of the community can be secured to limit access to different user-groups.

Addition of Knowledge

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Knowledge addition can take place both manually and automatically.  One key of the system is that it can monitor interaction among different participants and automatically store information and context regarding those interactions.  Knowledge addition can be done manually, of course, and the level of customization as to who is authorized to introduce what types of knowledge is fairly robust.  Other users claim the knowledge addition process is easy.  

Organization of Knowledge

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Since much of Practicity's knowledge acquisition can happen automatically, the knowledge that is acquired in such a manner is organized all relative to each other based on context as well as information.  

Visualization of Knowledge

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Documented users claim viewing stored knowledge is easy and straightforward, but this cannot be verified until I am able to use the sample server that I signed up for.

Knowledge Retrieval

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Documented users claim finding stored knowledge is easy and straightforward, but this cannot be verified until I am able to use the sample server that I signed up for.  How the contextual information relates to the retrieval process is the biggest wild card, but there is at least some information as to the content based retrieval I can provide before testing - the content based search is powered by dtSearch, a fast and mature text searching system which apparently provides robust indexing and relation data on the searches it performs.  More on the user end of Practicity's searching after I can participate in the sample web server.

Usage of Knowledge

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Since Practicity is designed primarily to be a collaborative environment for many different users performing different roles, this is one of the most important parts of the system.  Again, I cannot confirm how it is in the real world because I have not yet had a chance to participate in the demo.  As far as design promises, this is definately where this system shines.  Since it automatically captures knowledge based on peer-to-peer interaction which occurs through the system, it is able not only to catch information (content), but also contextual meta-data that seems like it would be VERY important since it is not derived in any statistical manner, but rather through real-world interaction between two people with the same purposes/goals.  With context-based information supplementing content, and seeing how any user on the system has a "contextual state" about him or her as far as the system is concerned, tracking the usage of knowledge is second nature to this system - indeed, it's what this system was designed to do.

Knowledge and Collaboration

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Once again, this is the entire point of the system.  The knowledge base is in one central location and is maintained by one entity (the Practicity server).  The development of that repository is unique in that not only does it occur through collaboration, it occurs BECAUSE of collaboration.  Two people don't need to get together and say "Let's develop this knowledge base so we can use it!"  They merely have to get together, start talking about what's important to them, and the knowledge base starts developing from there.

Knowledge and Organizational Memory

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This system can be used in many different ways and at least one of the case studies was a corporation that used it for all employees and used it to track organizational and procedural processes amongst employees interacting.  Therefore, when used for this purpose, it fulfills it.

Other Issues

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The only "other issue" I can think of is that it's difficult to test out the software if you're not an IT manager of some big company and even then, they set up a Practicity server for you and you can only test on their terms.  Because of this, there's no way to know for sure if their system delivers what the design/marketing promises...
Web pages Copyright © 1996-2001, Franz J. Kurfess, Email: fkurfess@csc.calpoly.edu
Last modified: Tue Apr 17 14:43:55 PDT 2001